Opinion
A jury convicted defendant Amulfo Vargas of various sex offenses against four victims—Shosh G., Maria R., Tamika G., and Bin Z.—and also found true three so-called “one strike” allegations. 1 The trial court sentenced defendant to three consecutive terms of 25 years to life in state prison, one consecutive term of 15 years to life, and a total consecutive determinate term of 61 years. 2
On appeal, defendant raises two contentions under
Crawford v. Washington
(2004)
In the unpublished portion of our opinion, we consider defendant’s second Crawford contention: that the court improperly allowed the sexual assault examinations of Tamika G. and Bin Z. to be described through the testimony of two nonexamining nurses, who relied on the reports prepared by the nurses who performed the examinations. Defendant contends that this error requires reversal of all counts as to those victims. We conclude that defendant has forfeited his challenge to the testimony, regarding the sexual assault examinations of Tamika G. and Bin Z. Moreover, even if the admission of that testimony was improper, the error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
We also consider in the unpublished portion of our opinion defendant’s claims that the court committed two instructional errors, namely, failing to properly instruct on the elements of kidnapping for rape against Tamika G. and Shosh G. (counts 11 & 17), and failing to instruct on simple kidnapping as a lesser included offense, requiring reversal of those counts. We find no error. We disagree with the legal premise of defendant’s argument regarding the instructions on kidnapping for the purpose of rape, and also conclude that he has forfeited the contention. Regarding defendant’s argument that the court erred in failing to instruct on simple kidnapping as a lesser included offense, we find no substantial evidence to support the instruction, and in the alternative conclude that defendant suffered no prejudice. Therefore, with the exception of reversing the conviction and sentence on count 6, we affirm the judgment.
BACKGROUND
1. Shosh G.—forcible rape (counts 1 and 21), kidnapping to commit rape (count 17), sexual penetration by a foreign object (count 18), forcible oral copulation (count 19), and forcible sodomy (count 20) *
On September 19, 2001, Ana Cardenas was working at First Legal Support Services at 1511 West Beverly Boulevard in Los Angeles. A young girl later identified as Maria R., perhaps 14 to 17 years old, entered the business. She was shaking and crying. Cardenas asked, in Spanish, what had happened. Maria, speaking in Spanish and crying constantly, told her that a man had forced her into his car and “made [her] do things.” When Cardenas asked what things, Maria repeatedly said that he made her give him oral sex.
Later that day, Jean Stephenson, a forensic nurse examiner at California Hospital Medical Center, performed a sexual assault examination on Maria, and completed the standard OCJP-923 report. Referring to the report, Stephenson testified that she asked Maria what had happened to her. Stephenson recorded Maria’s response in her report as follows; “[I]t says penetration of vagina by penis and I have marked it yes times two. Finger, yes. . . . For oral copulation of genitals [of] victim by assailant it is marked yes and of assailant by victim it’s marked yes times five.” As to whether the assailant ejaculated, Stephenson recorded Maria’s answer as “yes times two.”
In examining Maria, Stephenson observed redness on the genitalia, and abrasions to both sides of the labia majora (the outer lips of the vulva) and to the hymen. In Stephenson’s opinion, the injuries were consistent with blunt force trauma. Stephenson collected oral and vaginal swabs.
3., 4. *
Defendant’s Arrest *
DNA Analysis
DNA analysis matched samples obtained from Shosh, Bin, and Maria to samples from defendant’s oral swab and the used condoms seized from his master bedroom. The parties stipulated to the facts establishing the obtaining of the relevant DNA samples and the chain of custody for those samples. * 3
I. Crawford Issues
In
Crawford, supra,
Here, defendant challenges the introduction of two classes of hearsay under Crawford and its progeny: (1) Maria R.’s hearsay statements to nurse Jean Stephenson, and (2) hearsay testimony by Stephenson and Julie Lister regarding the OCJP-923 reports of the sexual assault examinations performed on Tamika G. and Bin Z. by other nurses (Chris Pollard as to Tamika, and Gina McConnell as to Bin). We discuss each contention in turn.
A. Maria R. ’s Statements to Jean Stephenson
Maria R. did not testify at trial. Rather, the prosecution relied on: (1) Maria’s statements to Ana Cardenas, apparently made immediately after the crime while Maria was crying and shaking, that a man had forced her into his car, “made [her] do things,” and made her give him oral sex; (2) nurse
On appeal, defendant does not challenge the introduction of Maria’s statements to Ana Cardenas, and does not challenge his conviction for forcible oral copulation of Maria. He contends, however, that the introduction of Maria’s statements to Jean Stephenson—in particular, her statements that her assailant penetrated her with his penis and finger and forced her to orally copulate him—constituted inadmissible, “testimonial” hearsay under Crawford, as analyzed by the California Supreme Court in Cage and Geier. He asserts that the error requires reversal of his convictions for the forcible rape of Maria and for penetration by a foreign object.
We conclude that Maria’s statements to Stephenson were testimonial and thus inadmissible. We find the error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt as to defendant’s conviction of forcible rape of Maria (count 3), but not as to his conviction of sexual penetration by a foreign object (count 6). Therefore, the latter conviction must be reversed.
1. The OCJP-923 Form
Sexual assault examinations are performed pursuant to a statutorily mandated “protocol for the examination and treatment of victims of sexual assault and attempted sexual assault . . . and the collection and preservation of evidence therefrom.” (§ 13823.5, subd. (a).) Part of the procedure is the completion of a mandatory form—called (at the time of the relevant events here) the “OCJP-923” form. (§ 13823.5, subd. (c).) 4
Before trial, the prosecutor filed a motion in limine to introduce Maria’s statements to Stephenson describing the sexual assault. As part of the motion,
2. The Motion in Limine
At the hearing on the motion in limine, Stephenson did not testify, and the prosecutor did not make a specific offer of proof as to Stephenson’s proposed testimony regarding the circumstances or purpose of the examination. Nonetheless, the prosecutor argued that Stephenson questioned Maria using the OCJP-923 form primarily for the purpose of providing treatment following the sexual assault, and that Stephenson’s role in obtaining evidence was secondary. Therefore, according to the prosecutor, introduction of the statements was permissible under
Cage,
which held that an injured victim’s statements made to a physician “not to obtain proof of a past criminal act, or the identity of the perpetrator, for possible use in court, but to deal with a contemporaneous medical situation that required immediate information about what had caused the victim’s wound”
(Cage, supra,
Defense counsel argued, by contrast, that the introduction of Maria’s statements were testimonial, because Stephenson acted as an agent of law enforcement and questioned Maria not for the purpose of medical treatment, but according to an established protocol for the purpose of gathering evidence for later use in court. The trial court overruled defense counsel’s objection, and Stephenson testified at trial.
3. Stephenson’s Trial Testimony
At trial, Stephenson testified that she was a registered nurse and forensic nurse examiner specializing in sexual assault examinations. She had performed more than 500 sexual assault exams. As she explained, in conducting such exams, “[w]e [forensic nurse examiners] collect evidence, . . . document evidence, . . . send the evidence to the crime lab, . . . take photographs and . . . testify in court.”
Stephenson identified the OCJP-923 form that she completed when she examined Maria R. on September 19, 2001, and a photograph she had taken of Maria. Through a translator, Stephenson informed Maria of the consent portion of the OCJP-923 form, which stated that the examination was to “discover and preserve evidence of the assault,” and that “the report of the examination and any evidence obtained will be released to law enforcement authorities.” Stephenson explained that the OCJP-923 form requires that the examiner ask certain questions and record the patient’s answers by checkmarks. Describing the form she filled out for Maria’s examination, Stephenson testified that the form required her to document “physical injuries and/or pain described by [the] patient. She [Maria] said she had a headache and pain in her stomach.” According to Stephenson, the completed form also reflected the following: “[I]t says penetration of vagina by penis and I have marked it yes times two. Finger, yes. . . . For oral copulation of genitals [of] victim by assailant it is marked yes and of assailant by victim it’s marked yes times five.” As to whether the assailant ejaculated, the report says “yes times two.”
Stephenson also described her physical examination of Maria as reflected in the diagram portion of the OCJP-923, in which she recorded her observation of redness on the genitalia, and abrasions to both sides of the labia majora (the outer lips of the vulva) and to the hymen. According to Stephenson, the injuries were consistent with blunt force trauma.
As was also reflected in the OCJP-923, Stephenson gathered other physical evidence: she took photographs and pubic combings and collected Maria’s
4. Cage, Geier, and Melendez-Diaz
We agree with defendant that under the analysis of the California Supreme Court in Cage and Geier, Maria’s statements to Stephenson were testimonial.
In Cage, a 15-year-old boy, suffering from a deep cut on his face, was awaiting treatment at a hospital emergency room when a deputy sheriff asked him what had happened between him and the defendant, the boy’s mother. The boy said that while his grandmother held him, the defendant cut him with a piece of glass. (Cage, supra, 40 Cal.4th at pp. 971-972.) Later, as part of his standard procedure in treating patients, an emergency room physician asked the boy what had happened. The purpose of the physician’s question was to obtain information that might be important in treating the wound. The boy again said that his grandmother had held him down while the defendant cut him. (Id. at p. 972.) Finally, after the boy was released from the hospital, the deputy sheriff conducted a tape-recorded interview at the police station in which the boy described the assault in greater detail. (Id. at pp. 972-973.)
The California Supreme Court held that the statements to the deputy sheriff were testimonial under
Crawford
and
Davis,
but that the statements to the physician were not. The court’s reasoning required the analysis of several factors: “We derive several basic principles from [the United States Supreme Court’s decision in
Davis v. Washington, supra,
In
Geier, supra,
In finding testimony concerning the DNA report admissible, the court “extracted from
Crawford
and
Davis]
that a statement is testimonial if (1) it is made to a law enforcement officer or by or to a law enforcement agent and (2) describes a past fact related to criminal activity for (3) possible use at a later trial. Conversely, a statement that does not meet all three criteria is not testimonial.”
(Geier, supra,
Recently, in
Melendez-Diaz,
a five-to-four decision, the United States Supreme Court held that “certificates of analysis” sworn to by prosecution laboratory analysts before a notary public and showing that seized evidence was cocaine, were testimonial under
Crawford. (Melendez-Diaz, supra, 557
U.S. at p. _ [
The reasoning of the majority in
Melendez-Diaz
is inconsistent with the primary rationale relied upon by the California Supreme Court in
Geier
to uphold the introduction of the DNA report in that case—that because a scientific observation “constitute[s] a contemporaneous recordation of observable events rather than the documentation of past events,” it is analogous to “the declarant reporting an emergency in
Davis”
and therefore is not testimonial.
(Geier, supra,
41 Cal.4th at pp. 605-606.) In
Melendez-Diaz,
the majority dismissed the contention of the respondent and the four dissenters that there is a distinction, for confrontation clause purposes, between a “conventional witness” who testifies to past events and is subject to confrontation, and the report of an “analyst” who makes near contemporaneous observations of neutral, scientific test results, and thus is not subject to confrontation.
(Melendez-Diaz, supra, 557
U.S. at pp. _-_ [129 S.Ct. at pp. 2535-2540].) Nonetheless, because of the limited nature of Justice Thomas’s concurrence, the precedential value of the majority’s analysis on this point is unclear as applied to a laboratory analyst’s report or a similar forensic report, rather than to, in Justice Thomas’s words, “ ‘formalized testimonial materials, such as affidavits, depositions, prior testimony, or confessions.’ [Citations.]”
(Melendez-Diaz, supra, 557
U.S. at p. _ [
For purposes of our analysis of Maria R.’s hearsay statements to Jean Stephenson, we conclude that even under the view of testimonial hearsay relied upon by our Supreme Court in Geier and Cage, Maria R.’s statements were testimonial.
5. Maria’s Statements Were Testimonial
First, within the meaning of
Geier,
Stephenson acted “in an agency relationship with law enforcement.”
(Geier, supra,
Second, the statements Maria made to Stephenson were, in the words of
Cage,
“out-of-court analogs, in purpose and form, of the testimony given by witnesses at trial,” and “occurred under circumstances that imparted, to some degree, the formality and solemnity characteristic of testimony.”
(Cage, supra,
Third, “ ‘objectively . . .’ considering all the circumstances that might reasonably bear on the intent of the participants in the conversation,” it is clear that the primary purpose of the examination was “to establish or prove some past fact for possible use in a criminal trial.”
(Cage, supra,
Fourth, unlike the injured victim’s statements to the physician in
Cage,
Maria’s responses to Stephenson’s questions were not made and received “to deal with a contemporaneous medical situation that required immediate information about what had caused the victim’s wound.”
(Cage, supra,
40
Thus, we hold that Maria’s statements to Stephenson were testimonial and inadmissible. (See People v. Gutierrez, supra, 177 Cal.App.4th 654 [narrative portion of sexual assault examination report containing victim’s description of assaults found testimonial].)
Harmless Error
“Confrontation clause violations are subject to federal harmless-error analysis under
Chapman v. California
(1967)
Here, the error in admitting Maria’s statements was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt as to defendant’s conviction of forcible rape of Maria. Even
Defendant states that it was “entirely possible” Vargas may have ejaculated after oral copulation and inadvertently placed the sperm in Maria’s vagina by digital penetration. Thus, the fact that sperm was found in Maria’s vaginal sample did not necessarily mean that sexual intercourse occurred. However, nothing in the record supports defendant’s suggestion—indeed, it is contrary to common sense. The existence of such a speculative possibility is insufficient to defeat the conclusion that the error in introducing Maria’s statement that defendant had sexual intercourse with her is harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
As to the conviction of forcible penetration by a foreign object, other than Maria’s statement to Stephenson that defendant digitally penetrated her vagina, there was no independent evidence to support the conviction. Therefore, the error in admitting that statement is not harmless beyond a reasonable doubt, and the conviction of penetration by a foreign object must be reversed.
B. Testimony by Stephenson and Lister regarding the reports of the sexual assault examinations on Tamika G. and Bin Z. *
II. Instructional Errors *
The conviction on count 6—sexual penetration of Maria R. by a foreign object—is reversed, and the eight-year sentence imposed on that count is ordered stricken. The clerk of the superior court is ordered to prepare an amended abstract of judgment so reflecting, and to transmit the amended abstract to the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation. In all other respects, the judgment is affirmed.
Manella, J., and Suzukawa, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied February 3, 2010, S178100. George, C. J., did not participate therein.
Notes
All section references are to the Penal Code. The jury convicted defendant of the following offenses: as against Shosh G., forcible rape (counts 1 & 21; § 261, subd. (a)(2)), kidnapping to commit rape (count 17; § 209, subd. (b)(1)), sexual penetration by a foreign object (count 18; § 289, subd. (a)(1)), forcible oral copulation (count 19; § 288a, subd. (c)(2)), and forcible sodomy (count 20; § 286, subd. (c)(2)); as against Maria R., forcible rape (count 3), forcible oral copulation (count 5), and sexual penetration by a foreign object (count 6); as against Tamika G., kidnapping to commit rape (count 11), forcible rape (count 12), and forcible oral copulation (count 13); and as against Bin Z., kidnapping to commit rape (count 14), forcible rape (count 15), and second degree robbery (count 16; § 211). The jury acquitted defendant of kidnapping Maria R. to commit rape (count 2). During jury deliberations, on the People’s motion, the trial court dismissed count 4 (forcible oral copulation against Maria R.).
In counts 1, 18, 19, 20, and 21 (Shosh G.), counts 12 and 13 (Tamika G.), and count 15 (Bin Z.), the jury found true one-strike allegations that the offense was committed during a kidnapping as defined in section 207, subdivision (a) (see § 667.61, subd. (e)(1)) and that the offense was committed during an aggravated kidnapping as defined in section 209, subdivision (b)(1) (see § 667.61, subd. (d)(2)). The jury also found true a separate one-strike allegation that defendant was convicted in the present case of two or more designated sex offenses against more than one victim. (§ 667.61, subd. (e)(5).) The jury found a one-strike allegation (§ 667.61, subd. (d)) not true as to counts 3, 5, and 6 against Maria R.
The trial court sentenced defendant as follows: three consecutive terms of 25 years to life in state prison under the one-strike allegations of section 667.61, subdivision (d)(2) for the convictions on count 17 (kidnapping Shosh G. to commit rape), count 12 (forcible rape of Tamika G.), and count 15 (forcible rape of Bin Z.); a fourth consecutive term of 15 years to life for the conviction on count 3 (forcible rape of Maria R.) under the one-strike allegation of section 667.61, subdivision (e)(5); and, as to the remaining counts, a total consecutive determinate term of 61 years.
See footnote, ante, page 647.
See footnote, ante, page 647.
Michael Mastrocovo, a criminalist assigned to the Los Angeles Police Department DNA unit, performed DNA typing on the sperm fraction of a genital swab taken from Bin Z. (item
Mastrocovo compared the DNA profiles he obtained from the sperm fraction of Bin’s genital swab (item 1-1B) and from the condom swab (item 33) to DNA profiles done by others on two other samples: a profile done by the California Department of Justice on the sperm fraction of a swab taken from Shosh G. (item 1-2B), and a profile done by Orchid Cellmark (a Maryland laboratory that performed DNA analysis for the Los Angeles Police Department) on a swab from Maria R. Mastrocovo found that the DNA profiles of Shosh’s and Maria’s samples matched the DNA profiles of Bin’s sample (item 1-1B) and the condom sample (item 33).
Defendant used a condom in his assault on Tamika, and no DNA evidence was introduced concerning the crimes against her.
The acronym “OCJP” stands for the Office of Criminal Justice Planning. At the time of Maria’s examination in 2001, former section 13823.5, subdivision (c), made the OCJP responsible for creating the examination form and for establishing a protocol for sexual assault examinations. (Former § 13823.5, subds. (a), (c); Stats. 1988, ch. 1575, § 3, p. 5684.) The Legislature abolished the OCJP in 2003 and directed the Department of Finance to designate another agency to carry out the OCJP’s former duties. (§ 13820, subd. (a).) According to Jean Stephenson’s testimony at trial, the Office of Emergency Services is now responsible for the examination form, and the current form bears the initials “OES.”
See footnote, ante, page 647.
